Events
2008 Quello Communication Law and Policy Symposium - Communications Policy in an IP-Environment
April 23, 2008, 1-5 pm | National Press Club, 529 14th Street NW, Washington, D.C.
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The two sessions of the conference explore infrastructure and content policy in the era of increasingly IP-based networks. Reception following.
1:00-1:10 Welcome and Introduction
Johannes M. Bauer, Quello Center
1:10-2:40 Infrastructure Access: Fairness and Efficiency
Next-generation IP-based networks will most likely be more strongly differentiated into a transportation layer and an application and services layer. In the emerging environment of inter-modal competition between multiple broadband platforms, the interests of platform providers and content providers will often be aligned but may sometimes at odds. Is the possibility of such frictions sufficient reason to mandate certain nondiscrimination principles or may they be dealt with more efficiently on a case by case basis? Will the absence of non-discrimination bias the evolution of technical network architectures toward more closed approaches that may hamper innovation in the long run? How will we best handle massive amounts of traffic as multimedia applications proliferate? Under which conditions will there be sufficient investment in next-generation infrastructure to close the gap that has opened to other nations?
Chair:Brian Fontes, AT&T
Speakers:
Marvin Sirbu, Carnegie Mellon University
Joe Waz, Comcast
Link Hoewing, Verizon
Rick Ducey, BIAfn and SpectraRep
2:40-3:00 Coffee Break
3:00-3:30 Keynote Address
Speaker:The Honorable Robert M. McDowell, Commissioner, FCC
3:30-5:00 Serving the Public Interest in Next Generation Media
Even when media were one-way vehicles for delivering content to media consumers, identifying the public’s interest in media services and crafting policies to address that interest posed conceptual and logistical challenges that were never fully resolved—a situation abundantly evident in the current clash of opinions over ownership policies for commercial media and the funding and oversight of public broadcasting. These challenges are considerably amplified by the emergence of a plethora of new media services delivered via IP based networks. With new media, users are both sources as well as recipients of information? What are the policy interests in the types of services and user-to-user relationships this new functionality has unleashed? Failures of commercial media to adequately supply socially-important information services is the traditional rational for public broadcasting. Will there be similar unmet public needs in a future dominated by IP-based services? If so, how should policy respond?
Chair:Steven S. Wildman, Quello Center
Speakers:
Paula Kerger, PBS
Robert Corn-Revere, Davis Wright Tremaine LLP
Philip Napoli, Fordham University
Ben Scott, Free Press
5:00-6:00 Reception
Related Publications and Media
2008 Quello Communications Law and Policy Symposium Speaker: Link Hoewing
2008 Quello Communications Law and Policy Symposium Speaker: Marvin Sirbu
2008 Quello Communications Law and Policy Symposium Speaker: Philip Napoli
2008 Quello Communications Law and Policy Symposium Speaker: Rick Ducey
2008 Quello Communications Law and Policy Symposium Speaker: Robert Corn-Revere
2008 Quello Communications Law and Policy Symposium Speaker: Robert M. McDowell
